I spent tonight with my mother, trying to cheer her up after some bad news regarding her health. I played her some old songs - basically top Swedish hits from the '30s, and we discussed them thoroughly. It made me think about how we sometimes talk about the Golden Era as if there was one, singular, homogenous, culture. See, she said that her parents had never listened to that sort of music (they were born in 1920-25) and that her grandmother would have a fit due to the vulgarity of such music if she heard it. They were strictly classical and opera (and my grandparents might venture into some blues that they considered sophisticated enough) and never really a part of the popular Golden Era culture. I don't think my great-grandmother could even be persuaded to go to the movies as moving pictures were "vulgar" - I think radio was accepted as a necessity but not really approved of. Basically, what people now herald as "traditional" and good taste would actually have been the epitome of modern vulgarity to my grandparents and their families.
I know it's not news, but it reminded me of how much more complex the past is than I sometimes give it credit for and how much less homogenous the Golden Era was than it's mostly depicted in popular culture today. When we talk of "vintage", which past do we really refer to?
I know it's not news, but it reminded me of how much more complex the past is than I sometimes give it credit for and how much less homogenous the Golden Era was than it's mostly depicted in popular culture today. When we talk of "vintage", which past do we really refer to?